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Premier Drug Addiction Treatment Center

Addiction isn’t a lack of willpower…

It’s often connected to brain chemistry, stress responses, trauma, mental health conditions, environment, physical dependence, and sometimes a painful sense of low self-worth that makes coping feel impossible without substances.

What is a Drug Addiction?

Drug addiction (also called substance use disorder) is a chronic, treatable condition where repeated substance use changes the brain and behavior over time. It can make it difficult to stop using, even when the consequences are serious.

People experience drug addiction differently. Some may notice a gradual increase in use. Others may feel a sudden loss of control after a stressful event, injury, or exposure to high-risk substances. No matter how it begins, treatment can help you regain stability, rebuild confidence, and move forward with a clear plan. It can also help rebuild self-esteem and self-trust, especially if shame, trauma, or anxiety/depression has convinced you that you ‘should be able to handle this alone.

Partial Hospitalization Program for Mental Health Treatment in Atlanta, GA

Common signs of drug addiction can include:

  • Using more than intended or using for longer than planned
  • Strong cravings or feeling preoccupied with getting, using, or recovering
  • Using substances to numb trauma symptoms, anxiety, depression, shame, or low self-esteem
  • Impacts on relationships, work, school, finances, or health
  • Increased tolerance (needing more to feel the same effect)
  • Withdrawal symptoms when cutting back or stopping
  • Difficulty stopping despite wanting to

Types of Drug Addiction We Treat

Mosaic Wellness and Recovery provides care for a range of substance addictions. Treatment is tailored to the substance involved, your history, your current symptoms, and what you need to stay safe and stable.

We provide:

  • Alcohol Addiction Treatment
  • Ambien Addiction Treatment
  • Heroin Rehab
  • Cocaine Rehab
  • Fentanyl Addiction Treatment
  • Meth Addiction Treatment
  • Marijuana Addiction
  • Kratom Addiction Rehab
  • Xanax Addiction Treatment
  • Methadone Rehab
drug rehab

Not sure where your substance use fits?

You don’t need to have the “right label” to ask for help. An assessment can clarify what’s going on and what level of care makes sense.

Benefits of Drug Addiction Treatment

Effective addiction treatment is about more than “just stopping.” It’s about understanding patterns, reducing risk, and building the tools and support that make recovery sustainable.

Treatment can help you:

  • Reduce or stop substance use safely with a structured plan and clinical support
  • Stabilize mood, sleep, and stress that often fuel cravings and relapse
  • Reduce shame and rebuild self-esteem through healthier coping and self-understanding
  • Learn coping skills for triggers, anxiety, conflict, boredom, and overwhelm
  • Repair relationships and rebuild trust through healthier communication and boundaries
  • Improve daily functioning at work, school, and home
  • Create a relapse-prevention plan that fits real life, not just ideal circumstances
  • Build long-term recovery supports so you’re not doing this alone
Our Approach

How We Treat Drug Addiction

Mosaic’s approach is built to match the level of care you need—residential or outpatient, based on safety, stability, and clinical needs. Our care is individualized, goal-oriented, and centered on practical recovery skills.

Your care may include:

  • Evidence-Based Treatment
    Including CBT, DBT, ACT, EMDR, MI, IFS, and MAT (where appropriate)
  • Comprehensive Assessment and Treatment Planning
    To understand your substance use history, current risks, mental and physical health needs, and what you want your life to look like in recovery
  • Individual Therapy
    To address triggers, cravings, relapse patterns, and the underlying drivers of use, such as stress, grief, trauma, shame, low self-esteem, or relationship dynamics
  • Group Therapy
    A supportive environment in which to build recovery tools: coping strategies, emotional regulation, distress tolerance, self-compassion skills, and relapse-prevention planning
  • Ongoing Progress Check-Ins and Coordinated Care
    Treatment adapts as you improve – we monitor what’s working, adjust goals, and help you stay engaged through setbacks without losing momentum
  • Aftercare Planning
    Helping you plan next steps, strengthen protective routines, and connect to ongoing recovery support

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have a drug addiction or just a “bad habit”?

If you’ve tried to cut back and can’t, if cravings feel intense, if your use is causing harm, or if you feel withdrawal symptoms when you stop, it may be more than a habit. A professional assessment can give you clarity without judgment.

Do you treat addiction even if I’m not using it every day?

Yes. Frequency isn’t the only indicator, loss of control, risky use, cravings, and consequences matter. Many people benefit from treatment even with intermittent or binge patterns.

What if I’m high-functioning and still working or caring for my family?

That’s common! Many high-functioning people are privately carrying trauma, anxiety/depression, or low self-esteem, treatment can support both stability and the internal drivers that keep the cycle going. Outpatient care can be a strong fit for people who need support while staying engaged with daily responsibilities. If more structure is needed, residential care may be recommended. We build a plan that supports stability without ignoring real-life constraints.

Is relapse a sign that treatment didn’t work?

No. Relapse can be part of the recovery process, not a moral failure. Treatment helps you understand why it happened, reduce future risk, and strengthen your plan, so setbacks don’t become a full return to old patterns.

Can you help if I’m addicted to more than one substance?

Yes. Many people struggle with multiple substances. Treatment planning looks at the full picture, patterns, triggers, risks, and the safest path forward.

What’s the first step to getting started?

The first step is a confidential assessment. We’ll talk through what you’re using, what you’ve tried before, what’s happening in your life now, and what level of support makes sense.

Take Your First Step Toward Recovery

If drug or alcohol use is starting to feel bigger than you can manage alone, you don’t have to wait for things to get worse.

If shame or low self-esteem is telling you it’s not bad enough to get help, that’s often a sign support would help, not a reason to wait. Get a confidential assessment to help you understand your options and get a clear treatment plan.